The purpose of this study was to investigate the psychosocial dysfunction of adolescents with stunted and normal height. This was a cross-sectional study using pediatric symptom checklist-17 (PSC-17), subjected to adolescents (age: 11 to 14 years) in Suburban, West Java Indonesia. Two variables of the subjects’ characteristics (sex and body height) were included in the multivariate analysis because the p was <0.25 (p = 0.22, p = 0.07). It was found that 53 subjects had psychosocial dysfunction (25 stunted, 4 severely stunted, and 24 normal heights) with significant comparing proportion between severely stunted and normal height (p = 0.04). In severely stunted adolescents, the risk of psychosocial dysfunction is 6.33 more than in normal stature group. Examination was done on those 53 adolescents resulted in several psychosocial disorders: 12 psychosocially low self-esteem, 12 family problems, and others ranging from other several aspect problems. Forty-one from the 53 adolescents were with psychopathology symptoms. There was psychosocial dysfunction just in adolescents with severely stunted.
Stunting in children has taken attention in the last few decades, because the incidence is still high especially in developing countries, and it affects 167 millions on 2010 [
Psychosocial disorders of stunting begin in adolescence [
Stunted adolescents are prone to psychosocial disorder in three aspects (internali- zation, externalization and attention). They often feel alienated in their social community, having negative perception, social withdrawn, low self-esteem, and often depressed by becoming mockery targets for their friends [
In Indonesia, there is no data onto adolescents’ stunted towards their psychosocial dysfunction. Therefore, it is important to assess the psychosocial dysfunction on stunted adolescents and examine the protection and precipitation factors as early detection and treatment of psychosocial problem.
Subjects were adolescents aged 11 - 14 years with normal height according to World Health Organization height-to-age and with stunted (<−2 SD), living in Jatinangor, West Java and willing to participate in the study. Exclusion criteria were stunted adolescent with accompanying defect such as chronically diseases or congenital defects and malnutrition. The Study was conducted in four junior high schools in Jatinangor from February to May 2015. The study method had had the ethical approval from the Ethical Committee of Medical Faculty of Padjajaran University and Hasan Sadikin Hospital in Bandung. The study was an analytical observation with cross-sectional method. Sample selection started from measuring students’ height, followed by giving informed consent to obtain subject’s approval for participating, filled the pediatric symptoms checklist 17 (PSC-17) questionnaire as early detection of psychosocial dysfunction in cognitive, emotion, and behavior. Psychosocial dysfunction aspects including five internal aspects (sad, easy to despair, anxiety, self-blame and seemed unhappy), seven external aspects (fighting, not paying attention to the rules, not understand the feelings of others, annoyed, blaming others for his own mistakes, refused to share and take the property of others), and five attention aspects (restless, daydreaming, easily switch attention, difficulty in concentrating, and move as controlled by an engine). The subject is assumed as psychosocial dysfunction if the result for internal aspects score ≥ 5 or external aspect score ≥ 7 or attention score ≥ 7 or total score ≥ 15 [
The study was conducted in four junior high schools in Jatinangor, West Java, Indonesia. From 200 adolescents who met the inclusion criteria, 100 adolescents were categorized as stunted and 100 were normal height. General characteristics of the subject between stunted and normal stature can be seen in
There are some independent variable which associated with psychosocial disfunction
Characteristic | Height Category | |
---|---|---|
Stunted (n = 100) | Normal (n = 100) | |
1. Age (years) Mean (SD) Range | 13.2 (0.8) 12 - 14 | 13.0 (0.7) 11 - 14 |
2. Stay with parents Yes No | 96 4 | 96 4 |
3. Family member living in one roof ≤4 >4 | 71 29 | 72 28 |
4. Parenting style Democratic Authoritarian Permissive | 79 16 5 | 77 19 4 |
5. Parents Occupation Government employee Trader Laborer Farmer Entrepreneur | 6 32 27 24 11 | 12 24 30 19 15 |
such as sex, mother education level, father education level, family’s income and stunted condition (
There is sub independent variable (
As shown in
Characteristic | Psychosocial dysfunction | p value* | |
---|---|---|---|
No | Yes | ||
1. Sex Boys Girls | 67 80 | 19 34 | 0.22 |
2. Mother education level Primary school Middle school High school University/Academy | 61 49 32 5 | 21 19 12 1 | 0.94 |
3. Father education level Primary school Middle school High school University/Academy | 56 39 43 9 | 19 15 16 3 | 0.99 |
4. Family income ≥2 Million/Month <2 Million/Month | 14 133 | 7 46 | 0.45 |
5. Body height Normal Stunted Severely stunted | 76 69 2 | 24 25 4 | 0.07 |
*Bivariate analysis (chi square).
Variable | p value* | OR (95% CI) |
---|---|---|
1. Stunted** -Stunted (stunted) -Severely stunted | 0.68 0.04 | 1.15 (0.60 - 2.19) 6.33 (1.09 - 36.75) |
*Logistic regression analysis backward stepwise, **Reference : Normal stature.
bullying historical background, lovers in 1 case, neglected child in 2 cases, 5 cases on anxiety, and 2 cases on siblings’ rivalry.
In
The psychosocial dysfunction occurrence might be caused by internal and external factors. The internal factors were coming from the self, the feeling different from others and the desire to have a good and proportional height. With this internal factors, stunted adolescent had low self-esteem and prone to depression. The external factors were derived from stigmatized environment to stunted adolescent. Family factors that affected the adolescent were parent to child relationship pattern, social class and economy status [
Psychosocial type of problem | Height category | ||
---|---|---|---|
Severely stunted | Stunted | Normal | |
Low self-esteem | 1 | 4 | 7 |
Family problem | 1 | 7 | 4 |
Academic problem | - | 5 | 3 |
Childhood abused background | 1 | 3 | 2 |
Bullying | 1 | 3 | 1 |
Anxiety | - | 2 | 3 |
Sibling rivalry | - | - | 2 |
Lovers | - | 1 | - |
Neglected child | - | - | 2 |
Sub-total | 4 | 25 | 24 |
Psychopathology type of symptoms | Height category | ||
---|---|---|---|
Severely stunted | Stunted | Normal | |
Depression | 2 | 9 | 7 |
Anxiety disorder | - | 3 | 4 |
Hyperactivity and concentrating problem | - | 3 | 2 |
ADHD | 2 | 4 | 2 |
Conduct disorder | - | 2 | - |
Bipolar disorder | - | - | 1 |
Sub-total | 4 | 21 | 16 |
Stunted adolescent is not always having psychosocial problem. There are protective and risk factors that associated with shape the adolescent personality. The protective factors are factors that will modify, change, or make a person stronger to encounter challenges from surrounding environment. This Factor will help adolescents to reach the positive development of psychology, eventhough there are some risk factors might danger development [
These protective factors interaction with risk factors will result in the presence of behavior, emotional, or mental disorders. Some protective factors are: positive characters/personality, supportive family environment, social environment as support system to strengthen the adolescent adaptive ability, good social skills and intellectual level. [
A Study on psychosocial aspect’s early behavior on stunted adolescent had found that stunting were associated with the stigmatization related to psychosocial stress [
In this study, the comparison between two-height groups had significant difference between severely stunted and normal height on psychosocial disfunction, severely stunted in adolescents has a possibility of 6.33 more than normal stature. This condition caused by internal factors of the severely stunted that make them introvert and low self esteem, the eksternal factors caused by stigmatization, lack of family support, the risk factors caused by bullying and juvenilization and the protective factors could not reverse the risk factors.
The condition on stunted group was not significantly difference with normal group because most of them had less psychosocial stress, the physical condition were not much difference so they had less stigmatization, juvenilization and they had more family support.
Stunted adolescents have worse psychosocial function than normal height adolescents [
The subject in this group were most female (57%), while male (43%). The influence of gender to psychosocial dysfunction using multivariate analysis was not significant (p > 0.05). The incident of psychosocial dysfunction was found more in females because females adolescent had more attention on their physical performance and they often compare their performance with others.
From total sample, only 3% mothers had higher level of education. Mother with low education level might lead to poor parenting style and unable to handle a stressor. Fathers’ education level was lower in stunted adolescent and could affect the family income and social economics. Family with low income are often felt anxious and depressed that lead to unresponsive parenting and lack of caring their children that might promote children behavior disorder. Some studies also found that poverty is one of the risk factor to psychosocial dysfunction in children [
The mother’s and father’s education and family income might not cause significant difference on psychosocial dysfunction, it because the family characteristics in sub- urban area in this study referring parents education and family income between stunted and normal groups tend to be similar, and the family in the suburban area find this condition as normal and not a problem.
In this study, there were 94 stunted and 6 severely stunted adolescents. From further examination, there were 53 adolescents with psychosocial dysfunction consisted of 25 stunted, 4 severely stunted, and 24 normal height adolescent as control group. Exami- nation result by child psychiatrist consultant toward these 53 adolescent had discovered psychosocial dysfunction types of problems. Low self-esteem (12 cases), family problem (12 cases) were main problems, other problems were academic problems (8 cases), child abused background (6 cases), bullying (5 cases), lovers (1 case), neglected child (2 cases), anxiety (5 cases) and siblings’ rivalry (2 cases). From all problems mentioned above, 41 cases had been categorized as psychosocial symptoms caused by multiple predisposition or precipitation factors from psychosocial problem.
Siblings’ rivalry was one of psychosocial problem aspect. The definition is the feeling of jealousy, anger, competition, contrast, fight, and hate towards their siblings. The causing factors are jealous, injustice, superiority, and parent compare children to siblings. Parents idolized one child who raised their pride as parents upon another child. These reflect as bad parenting attitude and left negative impact on children who could not fulfilled their parents’ pretension. This sensitive feeling of children should be treated with protective act from parents or environment to prevent the development of anxiety, depression, or low self-esteem brought to teenager or adult age [
Being bullied or peer victimization was one of psychosocial problems on stunted adolescent. Being bullied strongly risk factors that caused by peer pressure lead to academic failure. Bullying is an effort to force or hurt someone or some people who is psychologically or physically weaker. Bullying takes many forms; it could be physically such as hitting and asking money by force; or psychology such as mocking, spreading rumors, and cursing. It was pressuring and a traumatic experience that could be a precipitation factors to psychopathology disorder [
Various psychosocial dysfunctions in stunted adolescent prompt to poor quality of life [
Number of family member is another risk factor that affects psychosocial problems in adolescent. Children who stay with more than 4 family members often have emotional and behavioral disorders due to lack of time and caring from parents [
The predominant parenting style in both studies group was democratic parenting style whereas the smallest was permissive parenting style. No significant difference when comparing the parenting style of both groups. Democratic parenting style applied in family seems to be one of protective factors towards psychosocial dysfunction on stunted adolescents.
Nutrition became one of the factors known to affect the growth of children. Good nutrition will help to generate good growth regardless of genetic factors, which can be judged from the height that is owned by a child. But in this study, nutritional factors not become a factor for all the children who were subjected were children with good nutritional condition, not experiencing malnutrition or poor nutrition.
The limitation of the study was not conducting an evaluation using standardize instrument such as SCL-90 to examine if any parents’ had mental illness that could affect the child disorder. The other limitation was only assessing the relationship of stunting towards psychosocial dysfunction in early puberty adolescent that lived in Jatinangor. Small sample size of severely stunted adolescent was related to the sample selection criteria of not having congenital disease in this group of height along with time and budget limitation.
There was a significant difference of psychosocial dysfunction between severely stunted and normal height adolescents, while no significant difference was found between stunted and normal height adolescents. There were some psychosocial problems and psychopatology symptoms among the adolescent groups.
Erfanti, D.O., Setiabudi, D. and Rusmil, K. (2016) The Rela- tionship of Psychosocial Dysfunction and Stunting of Adolescents in Suburban, Indo- nesia. Open Journal of Medical Psychology, 5, 57-65. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojmp.2016.54007